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(1954-)
Who Is John Travolta?
John Travolta was born in New Jersey and dropped out of high school by age 16 to pursue acting. He became a star as Vinnie Barbarino in the TV series Welcome Back Kotter, followed by the highly successful films Saturday Night Fever and Grease. After a significant lull, Travolta made a career comeback in 1994 with Pulp Fiction, earning his second acting Oscar nomination and going on to star in an array of projects that included Get Shorty, Primary Colors, Battlefield Earth, Wild Hogs and American Crime Story.
Early Life
John Joseph Travolta was born on February 18, 1954, in Englewood, New Jersey. The youngest of six children born into a family of entertainers, Travolta dropped out of high school by age 16 to pursue a career in acting. He made his debut in an off-Broadway production of Rain (1972) and then joined the Broadway cast of Grease as a replacement cast member in the role of Doody. He was later part of the original cast for the hit 1974 musical Over Here!, starring Patty and Maxine Andrews along with Marilu Henner.
Movies and TV Shows
‘Welcome Back, Kotter,’ ‘The Boy in the Plastic Bubble’
In 1975, Travolta shot to stardom with his role as Vinnie Barbarino in the hit TV series Welcome Back, Kotter, becoming a popular teen heartthrob. The following year, he played the lead in the critically acclaimed TV movie The Boy in the Plastic Bubble. He and actress Diana Hyland, who portrayed his mother in the film, entered into a romantic relationship that was cut short when she passed away from cancer.
‘Saturday Night Fever’
Having made his big-screen debut in two horror flicks — The Devil’s Rain (1975) and Carrie (1976) — international fame soon came for the young actor with two successive box office smashes, the first being Saturday Night Fever (1977). Portraying the white suit-clad Tony Manero, Travolta earned an Oscar nod for his boogeying, hip swiveling role, becoming an enduring icon for disco nightlife and 1970s culture.
‘Grease’
An even more mammoth hit followed the next year in the form of Grease. For his reunion with the musical, Travolta took on the lead role of cool guy Danny opposite suffering love interest Sandy, as played by Olivia Newton-John. The audience for Grease was massive. The film reportedly had a production budget of $6 million yet eventually earned almost $400 million at the global box office, becoming the top-grossing live-action movie musical of all time.
‘Moment by Moment,’ ‘Two of a Kind,’ ‘Look Who’s Talking’
While it seemed Travolta could do no wrong with his run of TV and film successes, the actor saw his star power wane with forthcoming projects. After co-starring with Lily Tomlin in the 1978 romantic drama Moment by Moment,he did have another hit with the 1980 romantic drama Urban Cowboy. But this was followed by a series of misses such as the Saturday Night Fever sequel Staying Alive (1983), directed by Sylvester Stallone and featuring a longer-maned Manero aiming to make it on Broadway. Other modest film outings included Two of a Kind (1983), in which he reunited with Newton-John, and Perfect (1985), co-starring Jamie Lee Curtis. By the end of the 1980s, despite a brief comeback with the Look Who’s Talking series, featuring Kirstie Alley, Travolta’s lackluster films landed him in the has-been actor category.
Acclaim for ‘Pulp Fiction,’ ‘Get Shorty’
In 1994, Travolta made a monumental career comeback when he starred in Quentin Tarantino’s classic film Pulp Fiction. Travolta earned his second Academy Award nomination for his role as hitman Vincent Vega, also entering the pantheon of favorite film scenes as seen with his mesmerizing dance with Uma Thurman. Travolta went on to win a Golden Globe for his performance in the 1995 comedy Get Shorty, in which he portrayed movie-loving, loan shark collector Chill in a movie based on the novel by Elmore Leonard. A sequel followed in 2005, Be Cool, to much more subdued reviews, though the project still offered memorable performances from Dwayne Johnson and Vince Vaughn.
‘Broken Arrow,’ ‘Primary Colors,’ ‘Battlefield Earth’
Other notable films from the 1990s included Broken Arrow (1996), Phenomenon (1996) and Mike Nichols’ Primary Colors (1998), in which Travolta played a politician based on President Bill Clinton. Travolta ended the decade with The General’s Daughter (1999) and entered the new millennium with the woeful Battlefield Earth. Based on the sci-fi novel novel by Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard, the 2000 film was a pet project for Travolta, a Scientologist, and was almost universally drubbed by critics.
‘Swordfish,’ ‘Wild Hogs’
Travolta nonetheless persevered and returned with 2001’s Swordfish, an unevenly rendered cyber thriller that co-starred Halle Berry, Hugh Jackman and Don Cheadle. Other projects from the decade included Love Song for Bobby Long (2004), Ladder 49 (2004) and the hit bromance comedy Wild Hogs (2007).
Gender Bender in ‘Hairspray’
Travolta returned to his musical roots with the 2007 film adaptation of the Broadway smash Hairspray (which in itself was based on the 1988 film by John Waters). The flick tells the story of a plump youngster who wants to be a performer on a local dance show. Travolta played the girl’s mother, Edna Turnblad, with Christopher Walken playing husband Wilbur. With the help of wigs, makeup and costumes, Travolta convincingly transformed himself into a large, vivacious woman, showing off his vocal abilities once again and earning another Golden Globe nomination.
‘Bolt,’ ‘Old Dogs,’ ‘From Paris With Love’
Travolta then voiced the lead role in the animated Disney film Bolt (2008), playing a lost dog who believes he’s a superhero. He also performed the duet “I Thought I Lost You” with co-star Miley Cyrus for the film’s ending credits. In 2009, he appeared in Old Dogs, a comedic Disney film co-starring Robin Williams and Bernie Mac about two business partners who are unexpectedly charged with the care of 7-year-old twins. The following year, Travolta played goateed FBI agent Charlie Wax in the action flick From Paris With Love. He was part of another edgy outing more than two years later in Oliver Stone’s Savages.
Off the big screen, Travolta caused a big media stir at the 2014 telecast of the Academy Awards when he introduced actress/singer Idina Menzel’s performance of “Let It Go,” only to mispronounce her name as “Adele Dazeem.” He later sent Menzel an email and flowers as an apology.
‘The People v. O.J. Simpson: American Crime Story’
After Travolta appeared in the 2014 thriller The Forger, it was announced in early 2015 that he would join the cast of the FX anthology series The People v. O.J. Simpson: American Crime Story, looking at the Simpson arrest and the volatile circumstances surrounding the related 1995 murder trial. The Ryan Murphy-produced project featured Cuba Gooding Jr., Sarah Paulson, Sterling K. Brown and Nathan Lane alongside Travolta as defense attorney Robert Shapiro. The series debuted on Feb 2, 2016, and later that year, Travolta received a Golden Globe nomination for his supporting role.
‘Gotti’
Back in 2011, Travolta signed on to play John Gotti in a biopic of the notorious mob boss. However, the film hit many snags, taking years to get off the ground, and by the time filming began in 2016, stars like Al Pacino and Joe Pesci had already dropped out. Gotti finally earned its release in spring 2018, with Travolta’s leading performance unable to stave off the film’s poor reviews.
Putting the negative publicity of Gotti behind him, Travolta resumed his screen work in 2019 with the racing movie Trading Paint and the neo-noir The Poison Rose.
Wife and Children
Travolta married actress Kelly Preston in 1991. The couple’s first son, Jett, was born on April 13, 1992, and their daughter Ella Bleu, born in 2000. Of fatherhood, Travolta has said, “Having kids is something you can’t always do. Kids are like lightning. You grab that lightning when you can get it.” Preston passed away on July 12, 2020, after a two year battle with breast cancer.
Death of Jett Travolta
Tragedy struck the Travolta family when their son, Jett, died on January 2, 2009, during a family vacation in the Bahamas. A coroner’s report determined the cause of death to be a seizure. In May 2010, nearly 16 months after their son’s death, the couple announced that they were expecting another child. Son Benjamin was born in November of that year.
QUICK FACTS
- Name: John Travolta
- Birth Year: 1954
- Birth date: February 18, 1954
- Birth State: New Jersey
- Birth City: Englewood
- Birth Country: United States
- Gender: Male
- Best Known For: John Travolta is an award-winning actor who had breakout roles in ‘Saturday Night Fever’ and ‘Grease.’ He had a career revival with ‘Pulp Fiction’ and has starred in a wide range of additional projects.
- Industries
- Theater and Dance
- Television
- Film
- Astrological Sign: Aquarius
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QUOTES
- Dancing’s part of my soul. I enjoy it, it makes people happy, and it makes me happy.
- You feel alive to the degree that you feel you can help others.
- Having kids is something you can’t always do. Kids are like lightning. You grab that lightning when you can get it.
- I have to believe there’s some other life force out there. I don’t know in what form. But we can’t have all these galaxies and universes without something going on.
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